Match outcome and scoring margins are being decided: who wins the match, whether Medjedovic covers -1.5 sets or Navone covers +1.5, whether total games exceed 21.5/22.5/23.5, and whether total sets go over 2.5.
Payouts hinge on exact set scores and games totals, so shifts in set length or an early straight-sets win change multiple markets at once.
Mariano Navone and Hamad Medjedovic are the competitors whose form and tactics determine every market listed.
Navone is an Argentine clay-courser who favors long rallies; Medjedovic is a younger Serbian with a bigger serve and aggressive baseline strokes. Match play, stamina, and tactical adjustments matter for both.
Serve effectiveness, return pressure, and break-point conversion decide set margins and the games totals lines.
Clay-court rally length, players’ first-serve percentages, recent match fatigue, and any medical issues will move the handicaps and over/under game totals most directly.
Pre-match practice, official fitness updates, and the scheduled start time for signals about readiness and court conditions.
During the match, track first-set length, number of breaks, tiebreaks, and momentum swings—those early patterns are the fastest indicators for whether totals and the 2.5-sets line will shift.